other titles...
See also...
- Thee Black Boltz
- Magnetic
- Ate The Moon
- Pinstack
- Drop
- ILY
- The Most
- God Knows
- Blue
- Somebody New
- Streetlight Nuevo
Tunde Adebimpe (TV On The Radio)
Thee Black Boltz
SUB POP
Your telly on the wireless man comes through with his first ever solo release, flinging those trademark jolts of soul into the electro-indie mould that TVOTR first broke twenty years back - it might be dark out there but these bolts of hope will give you reason to cheer.
'Thee Black Boltz' is a powerful, inspired, and inspiring indie-rock album that grasps for small moments of joy amidst the dissonance and sadness of personal grief and social upheaval. Tunde initially conceived of his first-ever solo album in 2019, while TV On The Radio was on a break. Two years later, as the world emerged from the Covid pandemic, he started a notebook of words, illustrations and ideas, forming what he calls, “mixtape of emotions the music could evoke. A feeling map of sorts.” It is how Tunde begins most of his projects, and in 2011 he started translating those ideas into music with the help of multi-instrumentalist Wilder Zoby (Run The Jewels), with whom he shares a studio with in Los Angeles.
'Thee Black Boltz' is not a TV On The Radio album. But the excitement of doing something on his own ignited a similar spark in Tunde as the early TV On The Radio days. The songwriting process is the same, but without his TVOTR bandmates Tunde “didn’t have that scaffolding to hang on. That was both terrifying and exhilarating.”At the heart of the album is its title, a nod to Tunde’s propensity to write and sing about the human condition, in all its forms, under all its stressors, both big and small. It is his response to the macro unease of a post-pandemic world careening towards violent authoritarianism and the personal grief that has come from loss in recent years, specifically the sudden passing of his younger sister while making this album. 'Thee Black Boltz' is Tunde’s desperate grasping of small moments of joy amidst the dissonance and sadness, any way he can. “It was my way of building a rock or a platform for myself in the middle of this fucking ocean.”
As Tunde writes in his notebook, “The sparks of inspiration /motivation/ hope that flash up in the midst of (and sometimes as a result of) deep grief, depression or despair. Sort of like electrons building up in storm clouds clashing until they fire off lightning and illuminate a way out, if only for a second.” “Also,” he adds. “It’s a good name for a cool metal band, and I think that most people would describe me as akin to a very cool metal band.”